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Raspberry Pi 3 Basics

There are plenty of articles online about the different things you can do with a Raspberry Pi. I recently bought a new one from Adafruit and I wanted to write down the steps I took to create a baseline configuration for future projects.

Setting Up Rasbian

I downloaded the latest version of Raspbian and burned it to a new micro SD card. I plugged that in along with some peripherals I bought:

The Raspberry Pi 3 actually has built-in WiFi but I thought I'd have a stronger connection using an external USB adapter.

After booting for the first time, I wanted to get rid of the default pi user. To do this, go to the start menu, open "Raspberry Pi Configuration" under "Preferences" and turn off the "Auto-Login" option. Then open a terminal and create a password for the root user:

sudo passwd root

Once that's done, reboot, log back in as root and run the following command:

usermod -l [user] -d /home/[user] -m pi

...replacing [user] with your desired username. This will transfer all of the pi user's existing settings to the user that you create. Now remove the root user's password:

sudo passwd -d root

...and log back in as the new user. Next I ran the raspi-config command to change some settings:

sudo raspi-config → Change User Password

sudo raspi-config → Change Hostname

sudo raspi-config → Localization (time zone, keyboard, etc.)

sudo raspi-config → Advanced → Expand Filesystem

That last option will ensure that the whole micro SD card is available to Raspbian. Save the settings and reboot again.

Getting Online

In order to automatically connect to WiFi, the network information should be added to the following file: /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf

A single command can be used to generate the appropriate information and add it to the file. This will also store the password as an encrypted 32-byte hexadecimal number rather than in plaintext. Run the following:

You can then open the wpa_supplicant.conf file and remove the line with the plaintext password, which is not necessary. If you are using a network that does not broadcast its SSID, there is one more line you will need to add between the ssid and psk lines: scan_ssid=1

You can find more information on Raspberry Pi wireless configuration here.

Note: Any command you run will be stored in the ~/.bash_history file once your session ends. This means that the password for your wireless network will be stored there since it was part of the wpa_passphrase command. During your next session, remember to edit this file and remove the password information from it.

At this point I had two wireless interfaces running because I was using the external USB WiFi adapter. I wanted to turn off the Raspberry Pi's native WiFi adapter, which meant I had to blacklist the drivers for it. This can be done by adding the following lines to /etc/modprobe.d/raspi-blacklist.conf:

blacklist brcmfmac
blacklist brcmutil

Additionally, if you want to disable Bluetooth, these lines can be added:

blacklist btbcm
blacklist hci_uart

Obviously not everyone will need to take these steps.

Patching and Security

You should now be connected to your wireless network after rebooting. Make sure to apply all the available updates once you're online:

sudo apt-get updatesudo apt-get dist-upgrade

Reboot once the patches have been applied and then upgrade the firmware:

sudo rpi-update

After another reboot, all the necessary patches should be in place. The next thing I set up was the SSH service:

Backup the /etc/ssh/sshd_config file

Edit the config file and add lines for the Port and AllowUsers keywords

Save it and enable SSH by running sudo systemctl enable ssh

Now SSH should be listening and only users specified by AllowUsers can connect. I also set up UFW – it's a simple way to block unwanted incoming traffic. In order to accept only SSH requests, run the following commands:

sudo apt-get install ufwsudo ufw allow [port]/tcpsudo ufw enable

...replacing [port] with the SSH port being used. Don't forget to whitelist new ports in UFW as you set up more services going forward.

The last step I took was to configure automatic upgrades. The following commands can be used:

// Do automatic removal of new unused dependencies after the upgrade
// (equivalent to apt-get autoremove)
Unattended-Upgrade::Remove-Unused-Dependencies "true";
// Automatically reboot *WITHOUT CONFIRMATION* if
// the file /var/run/reboot-required is found after the upgrade
Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot "true";
// Automatically reboot even if there are users currently logged in.
Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot-WithUsers "true";

Once that's done, make sure the /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/20auto-upgrades file contains the following lines:

The Icon there is a random thumbnail; you can use any one you want. I also wanted to install Kodi to watch videos. This was as simple as:

sudo apt-get install kodi

The only other setting I needed to change was the amount of memory allotted to the GPU. I found 256 MB to be the "sweet spot" for running Kodi, streaming online video, etc. Go to the start menu, open "Raspberry Pi Configuration" under "Preferences" and find the "GPU Memory" option under "Performance". Change this to 256 and video should work correctly after a reboot.

Lastly, I installed BleachBit and cleaned everything up. Here's a list of the options I do NOT enable when running BleachBit:

APT → Package lists

Bash → History

System → Free disk space

System → Memory

System → Rotated logs

Next Steps

I will write about some security tools and projects that can be used with the Raspberry Pi but I wanted to get this baseline configuration down on paper. Let me know if you run into any issues while setting one up!